Literature DB >> 24261372

Biopsy of suspicious bone lesions in patients with a single known malignancy: prevalence of a second malignancy.

Barbara Raphael1, Sinchun Hwang, Robert A Lefkowitz, Jonathan Landa, Michael Sohn, David M Panicek.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The probability that a suspicious bone lesion in a patient with one known malignancy is actually due to a second, previously unknown primary malignancy has been reported to be 2-8%. We sought to determine this prevalence as well as that of benign diagnoses in a larger number of patients in a tertiary cancer center.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The medical records of 482 consecutive patients (254 women and 228 men) with only one known primary malignancy each (excluding nonmelanoma skin cancer) and who underwent biopsy of a suspicious bone lesion were retrospectively reviewed. The results of bone biopsy were classified as benign, metastasis of the known primary malignancy, due to a second primary malignancy, or nondiagnostic or indeterminate.
RESULTS: In 103 of 482 (21%) patients, bone biopsy results were benign, 316 (66%) were due to metastases of the known malignancy, 15 (3%) were due to a second malignancy, and 48 (10%) were nondiagnostic or indeterminate. Second malignancies included osteosarcoma (n = 4); soft-tissue sarcoma (n = 2); lymphoma (n = 2); plasma cell malignancy (n = 2); and lung cancer, thyroid cancer, renal cancer, chondrosarcoma, and carcinoma of unknown primary (n = 1 each).
CONCLUSION: In 3% of patients with one known malignancy and a suspicious bone lesion, the lesion was due to a previously unknown second malignancy; in 21% of patients, the lesion was benign. Bone biopsy is recommended in the management of patients with one known cancer and a suspicious bone lesion only if the presence of a second malignancy would alter clinical management.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24261372     DOI: 10.2214/AJR.12.10261

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol        ISSN: 0361-803X            Impact factor:   3.959


  6 in total

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